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The truth has been coming out in the Anthony Pellicano illegal wiretap, racketeering, harassment and witness tampering trial.

Court testimony and subsequent articles over the last week reveal that one of my main grievances outlined in my United Nations human rights complaint from September 2007, regarding an incident where an assailant tried to run me over with a car, while I was on foot going to use a payphone for some privacy from my illegally wiretapped line, is one of Anthony Pellicano’s methods of harassment.

“This month, on August 9, 2007, shortly after 1 PM someone deliberately tried to run me down with their car outside a plaza that is across from a mall that I have frequented since I was a kid, that is now coincidentally located on the same street as Madonna’s newly established Kabbalah Center in Miami.” – September 2007

The payphone incident wasn’t the first time it happened, nor was it the last, but it was the worst and done with the intent to kill.

Two others have now said in the last week that the psychopath Pellicano hired and or wanted to hire people to run over wiretap victims with a car.

The woman that triggered the FBI case against him, Los Angeles Times journalist Anita Busch, revealed in the New York Times a week ago:

Another man who hired him to illegally wiretap an innocent man, admitted under a plea deal that Anthony Pellicano suggested he pay him to hire someone to kill the wiretap victim by running him over with a car.

“Mr. Sender testified. “He would have someone follow him back, drive him off the road and bury his body somewhere in the desert…‘you’ve spent all this money, why don’t you just whack (kill) him?’ ” – March 2008 http://www.nytimes.com

These revelations confirm that this is how Hollywood operates, utilizing these sick Anthony Pellicano tactics against innocent people.

When the harassment against me commenced in Miami, Anthony Pellicano was a free man running his criminal enterprise out of Los Angeles.

He taught these Hollywood lawyers and star clients that this was the way to dispose of problems, also known as innocent people, who choose to speak out about wrongdoing, go to the FBI or become too much of a legal burden when your chickens come home to roost.

However, since the time of his incarceration, the illegal wiretapping and harassment of me in Miami has continued, and been witnessed by many credible people.

All the forms of harassment that have been utilized against me, which I formally reported to the FBI in 2005, have since been revealed in his current trial two and a half years later, as Anthony Pellicano tactics (wiretapping, hackings, break-ins, stalking and attempting to run people over with cars).

“In 1999, Mr. Sender invested $1.1 million with Mr. Russo. Later, Mr. Sender sued Mr. Russo, accusing him of pocketing the money. Mr. Russo dodged process servers for more than a year, until Mr. Pellicano was brought into the case at the urging of Mr. Sender’s new lawyer, Bert Fields. (Mr. Sender said he paid Mr. Fields’s firm about $300,000, but recovered only $25,000 from Mr. Russo.)

Mr. Sender testified Tuesday that Mr. Pellicano had wiretapped Mr. Russo for a year and had played recordings of Mr. Russo’s intercepted phone calls for him 10 or 15 times. But Mr. Pellicano grew sick of listening to Mr. Russo, Mr. Sender said. And, in a “frightening” moment in the garden of Mr. Sender’s mansion in Bel-Air, he said, Mr. Pellicano suggested killing Mr. Russo.

Mr. Pellicano said that “if I wanted to, I could basically authorize him” to have Mr. Russo “murdered on the way back from Las Vegas,” Mr. Sender testified. “He would have someone follow him back, drive him off the road and bury his body somewhere in the desert.” Mr. Sender said he had declined.

On cross-examination, Mr. Pellicano, acting as his own lawyer and speaking of himself in the third person, seemed more concerned with getting his own words right than with disputing Mr. Sender’s account. He does not face any charges related to Mr. Sender’s statements.

“I was telling the truth, and no one was believing me,” she said. “People started questioning whether I had somehow lost my mind. It’s hard to take, when you’re telling the truth and people are looking at you sideways and laughing in your face.”

“Some of it seemed pretty fantastical at first,” said R. Kinsey Lowe, then a Los Angeles Times editor. “But even paranoid people do have enemies. And she had a way of getting dirt.”

On Aug. 13, unknown to Ms. Busch, an F.B.I. informant recorded a suspect saying that the threat on her had not done any good — she was “back at it.” On Aug. 16, she said, two men in a Mercedes tried to run her down outside her apartment.

In October 2002, a man was arrested for the June threat. A few weeks later, court records show, a Pacific Bell repairman found “some equipment” on her phone lines; a technician later told her it was a wiretap.

“It was, literally, watching your career disappear in front of your eyes, and you can’t do anything about it,” Ms. Busch said. “It was all I ever wanted to do,” she said of journalism. “I loved it — past tense. It just wasn’t in me anymore.”

“I don’t really want anybody to know what I’m doing,” she said. “I’m trying to find a new career to love.”

“I hired Mr. Pellicano because he told me he could listen in” to the young woman’s phone calls, a shaken George Kalta, 37, told U.S. District Judge Dale S. Fischer, as he entered his guilty plea. “That was the only reason I hired Mr. Pellicano.”

But criminal defense attorney Leslie Abramson, representing Kalta, said outside court on Friday that Pellicano bragged to her client about listening in on other people’s conversations and about having connections within law enforcement. The connections included “a contact” in the Los Angeles County district attorney’s office and a police officer who he said could get him a district attorney’s memo for $5,000.

“He bragged about how he did this [wiretapping] for other clients,” Abramson said. “He said that is why people pay him so much.

For years he’d cultivated an image of a Sicilian, baseball bat carrying, knife wielding, Godfather watching thug, nicknamed “The Sin Eater,” but there is actually a reason for his conduct – according to numerous credible reports, he is mixed up with the mafia.

The harassment of Los Angeles Times writer Anita Busch by Anthony Pellicano has a mafia angle. Busch was investigating his client, actor Steven Seagal, and his ties to the mafia, which has since been widely written about in the press.

Last year Anthony Pellicano was also formally accused by the government of calling for a mob hit on one of his former employees, to stop him from testifying at the PI’s forthcoming Hollywood trial for illegal wiretapping, harassment and witness intimidation, in an ongoing case that’s already netted 12 arrests.

The Chicago Sun-Times reports: Allegations of mob ties have long dogged Anthony Pellicano, once the private investigator of choice for Hollywood stars.

On Thursday, for the first time, the feds marked his place in Chicago mob history, saying he once belonged to the mob crew of Joseph “Joey the Clown” Lombardo.

A former associate of Lombardo, Alva Johnson Rodgers, is cooperating with the feds and is expected to testify at trial that Pellicano asked him to torch two buildings in the mid-1970s.

Pellicano grew up in Cicero and worked in Chicago for years before heading to California. The Sun-Times first reported last month that Pellicano did the investigative work to provide Lombardo with an alibi for the 1974 murder of a key federal witness against Lombardo.

In one case, Pellicano allegedly paid Rodgers to shut down a restaurant. Rodgers got some neighborhood kids to break the restaurant’s windows, which hurt business, but Pellicano allegedly was looking for something a little more permanent, like burning the place down. Rodgers allegedly declined and refused to give Pellicano his money back.

In another instance, previously reported by the Sun-Times, Pellicano allegedly asked Rodgers to burn down a building in the northwest suburbs, and Rodgers complied. No word yet from Hollywood liberals who’ve hired Pellicano over the years.” http://nalert.blogspot.com

For said individual delving into people’s private lives and allowing others to as well, in violation of the Constitution and all applicable laws, which Director of a federal law enforcement agency did ALL of the following:

Cheated on his wife.

Is in love with an actress.

Spent too much money on federal items he knew to be of no use.

Has peculiar offshore holdings that Congress should take a very close look at.

Has pulled wiretaps on innocent people – and further read their medical records in violation of patients’ privacy rights.

Has planted lies about people to get his own way.

Gives to charities he thinks will return favors.

Spends too much time writing to people he doesn’t know.

Still plays with a toy he is not supposed to.

Has been given an ultimatum he doesn’t like by someone in his life.

Has been unlawfully moving around federal files people have been lawfully requesting under the Freedom Of Information Act, having agents do the dirty work for him, under the auspices of doing it for your country, when in actuality they are doing it for him and breaking scores of federal laws in the process, certain to draw Congressional charges of the worst order if found out.

Got outed a few days ago in the British press, in credible publications, for lying and obstruction of justice in another case dealing with corrupt domestic government officials selling state secrets of a nuclear nature to a foreign country.

An unimpeachable, non-Florida source in the U.S. government, thoroughly familiar with him, who is also a fan of the site, previously informed me that said Director has also “obstructed justice” in another very serious federal case and just how he did it. He made the same kind of claims about an unrelated case, before this latest incident in the British Press last week, but it betrays the same pattern of misconduct by said Director.

Recently, it was reported the FBI wiretapped 27 million phone calls in one year. Are there really that many terrorists in America. The country would cease to exist if there was that much terrorist activity in one year and not one terrorist has been caught via wiretapping.

Furthermore, if terrorists are speaking in their native tongue and using local lingo or made up jargon, translators will not know what they are talking about anyway.

An innocuous example of this is teenagers who speak English using modern slang and adults looking on baffled as to just what they are talking about.

What were these 27 million calls about, then. No wonder the agency can’t pay its phone bill:

“Can they hear you now?”

By Eric Heyl
TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Friday, January 18, 2008

WASHINGTON — National security experts are heralding a bold new FBI initiative that should significantly bolster the country’s anti-terrorism efforts.

The bureau announced today that it will set up payment plans to gradually pay off its overdue phone bills. The move is intended to enable the bureau to eventually resume numerous wiretaps that telecommunications companies have shut off because of the delinquencies. http://www.pittsburghlive.com

FBI Recorded 27 Million FISA ‘Sessions’ in 2006

At the end of 2006, the FBI’s Telecommunications Intercept and Collection Technology Unit compiled an end-of-the-year report touting its accomplishments to management, a report that was recently unearthed via an open government request from the Electronic Frontier Foundation.

Strikingly, the report said that the FBI’s software for recording telephone surveillance of suspected spies and terrorists intercepted 27,728,675 sessions.

Twenty-seven million is a staggering number given that the FBI only got 2,176 FISA court orders in 2006 from a secret spy court using the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.

According to the math that means each court order resulted in 12,742 “sessions,” all in regards to phone, not internet, surveillance.

“The names cited in an indictment of private eye Anthony Pellicano read like a road map leading to Bertram Fields and his famous clients.” – Robert W. Welkos, L.A. Times, Photo: Al Seib

Madonna’s attorney Bert Fields, no relation to Mrs. Fields, who is the subject of an FBI probe into illegal wiretapping, in conjunction with that of their incarcerated private eye, Anthony Pellicano, lost a round AGAIN in court having to do with a copyright infringement case. The lawsuit is regarding the film “Sahara” starring Matthew McConaghuey.

Previously, the judge ordered Fields’ client, Clive Cussler, to pay $5 million dollars to Crusader Entertainment. This week, judge John P. Shook, denied a motion that was attached to Bert Fields’ amended complaint, which was an attempt to block payment of said sum (article link).

Fields’ influence with the courts is clearly waning. Hmm I wonder why. What oh what could it be that’s changed.

But look at the bright side. You are an 80 year old, stressed out, cantankerous, overworked, press mouthpiece for trouble prone stars – you could kick the bucket before the FBI gets a chance to lock you up.

In news that’s sure to scare the life out of Hollywood, indicted wiretapping private investigator Anthony Pellicano will be representing himself at trial, which is a bad idea in a criminal case. Talk about shooting fish in a barrel.

Side Bar: Is the electric chair an option in this case. Just checking.

John Mc Tiernan

Pellicano has done work for clients such as Madonna, Tom “Xenu” Cruise, O.J. Simpson, Brad Grey and Die Hard director John McTiernan, who has already been sentenced to jail in the case.

Pellicano to Represent Self in Trial

LOS ANGELES (AP) — A federal judge on Wednesday reluctantly allowed Hollywood private eye Anthony Pellicano to take over as his own lawyer in his trial on charges of illegally wiretapping celebrities.

U.S. District Judge Dale S. Fischer told Pellicano it was a bad decision but he was required by a U.S. Supreme Court ruling to allow the private investigator to do so if he insisted. http://ap.google.com/article

Grocery magnate, billionaire Ron Burkle, slammed disgraced former Hollywood CEO, Michael Ovtiz, accusing him of hiring the now incarcerated, Anthony Pellicano, to illegally spy on him via wiretaps and other unsavory conduct. The pattern of invasion of privacy and harassment Burkle complains of, fits that of Pellicano’s numerous victims.

“Michael hired Anthony Pellicano to come out and tap my phones and provide other illegal activity, which I think is repulsive and, I think, it speaks to his character,” Burkle said in a deposition.” – Bloomberg

In other Anthony Pellicano news, the disgraced PI is whining from prison that the Feds violated his 6th Amendment rights. Oh, put a cork in it, already. You worry about protecting your major orifices in jail and let everybody else be the judge of whose rights got violated, Mr. I wiretap, hack, threaten and stalk people when I’m not breaking into their homes Watergate style.

All of a sudden Pellicano cares about human rights. It’s so hypocritical coming from this man. He violated most of the U.S. Code and Constitution at innocent people’s expense, yet he is complaining about rights violations.

He allegedly wiretapped, hacked and destroyed hard drives, stalked, committed identity theft as harassment and threatened many people. He did this repeatedly on behalf of stars in Hollywood and allegedly a certain 2008 Presidential Candidatewith connections to celebrities that wanted to know things about opponents, business partners, spouses in divorces and potentially lucrative new companies they wished to defraud out of their assets.

This man is alleged to have threatened a woman and her disabled child, to persuade her not to pursue legal action against one of his dirty clients.

This man is alleged to have sent people their live children’s death certificates with notes stating he knows where they go to school.

He allegedly harassed and terrorized one woman so badly in Los Angeles on behalf of a Hollywood degenerate, terrifying her to such degrees that she flew all the way to Israel to phone and report it to the FBI in America, as Pellicano was said to have bugged her phone and property, watching her every move, as he has done to others.

This is the type of psychopath we’re dealing with. It takes a sick mind to do these things. Yet stars in Hollywood, some of whom have been indicted, with more to follow, knew and kept lining up to pay this man to engage in this very illegal conduct.

Because in Hollywood they are long on money and short on brains. Under the law, if you commission a crime, you may as well have done it by the time it gets through criminal court.

As far as I am concerned, as someone who has seen your tactics up close, they need to lock you away and throw away the key, as you are a psychopathic public menace that cannot be trusted with any form of freedom.

And the stars that knowingly paid you are just as disgusting and contemptible as you are. You Hollywood degenerates that paid this man need a dose of your own medicine via a government probe. Criminals are subjected to this, so why not you, as you have broken the law:

You need to be wiretapped via judicial order with your business and that of your family ending up in transcripts, just like you paid Pellicano to illegally do to innocent people, in violation of the U.S. Code.

You need to be followed around and watched like a house pet, by government employees, to see exactly what you get up to, just like you paid Pellicano to illegally do to innocent people, in violation of the U.S. Code.

You need to be threatened and barked at, but by government employees questioning you to ascertain just how much you knew and when, just like you paid Pellicano to illegally do to innocent people, in violation of the U.S. Code.

You need to have your computers hacked, hard drives copied, bank accounts scanned, medical records accessed and prescriptions photocopied, but by government employees, just like you paid Pellicano to illegally do to innocent people, in violation of the U.S. Code.

You deserve some old fashioned justice in legally being subjected to the same treatment you dished out, but at the hands of the authorities, in action other criminals have had to face in government sanctioned investigative probes.